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Lost in Austin

The Evolution of an American City

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A long-time Austinite and journalist's exploration of the profound movements that have shaped Austin, Texas—charting the shifts within its vibrant music scene, the impact of rapid urbanization, and the challenges of gentrification—ultimately questioning what this city's transformation signals for American urban identity.

Austin isn't what it used to be.

This is a common sentiment amongst locals, offered with the same confused—and often disappointed—tone familiar to residents of Seattle, Portland, or San Francisco, where rapid growth and expansion have led to an urban identity crisis. Like those cities, Austin is known for its unique qualities: a thriving live music scene and housing affordability that historically made it a compelling home for creatives and self-described weirdos to roost. But now, as Big Tech infiltrates and climate change looms, Austin has become less familiar—and far less affordable.

An exploration of the beloved city's evolution, Lost in Austin also serves as a critical exploration of the transformation that has befallen one of America's most beloved cities—and serves as a warning for what the homogenization of cities means for American urban identity. With a journalist's perspective and the heart of an Austinite, Alex Hannaford delves into the consequences of the city's rapid growth in chapters that chronicle the major movements permanently altering the city: a vanishing music scene, soaring property values, and the encroachment of major industry. Through keen reportage and extensive interviews, Lost in Austin unveils the toll of unchecked growth and the city's shift from its rebellious spirit to commercialization.

Through those stories—vibrant, colorful, and clearly full of love for this city—Hannaford raises a crucial question: How do American cities, once celebrated for their unique values, became casualties of their own rapid growth and success? And can they ever return to what they once were?

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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2024
      Austin is a city suffocating from endless growth, a disenchanted former resident reports. For all its fame, this celebrated Texas town has gone sadly astray, writes Hannaford, a British-born freelance journalist now based in New York. It is a victim of its own success, having succumbed to the same forces of rampant overdevelopment, gentrification, racism, gun proliferation, homelessness, and environmental decay that are turning other American cities into enclaves almost exclusively for the wealthy. And in his estimation, there's little or no political will to stop it. Hannaford barely recognizes his erstwhile home of 20 years, once a progressive, funky, laid-back, culture-rich haven for creatives and misfits. While it grew into its (manufactured) reputation as a live music capital, Austin lured and was inundated with new residents and tech corporations, then did its utmost to destroy all the characteristics that had made it so appealing. Austin is now the 10th-largest city in the U.S., with all the ills that come with it. Hannaford chronicles the development of each issue in meticulous detail (albeit from a strongly left-of-center perspective), including the effects of climate change exacerbated by corporate and political disregard. The evidence he presents is damning. Although he apportions credit to what Austin is trying to do right, he fears that it may be too little too late if things continue as they are in this increasingly homogenized city lodged in a deep red state. Happily, he offers more than a litany of malfeasances. Hannaford also invests his book with personal anecdotes, arresting profiles, and the vivid stories of a diverse group of citizens and undocumented immigrants. Nonetheless, the ultimate impression is that of a city steadily losing its distinctiveness and livability. A model of first-rate reportage.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2024
      In the early aughts, journalist Hannaford was captivated by Austin, the "special city with a slow-beating heart and a warm embrace," but, years later, he and his family decided it was no longer the weird and peaceful city they loved, and they relocated. This urban history examines Austin from multiple viewpoints. Longtime residents, including restaurant owners, barbers, musicians, teachers, community activists, and undocumented immigrants, relay stories of their lives from the 1970s through the present. Hannaford's examination of scientific studies on the environmental impacts of unrestrained growth on quality of life, especially water resources, provides a useful background to these personal narratives. The history of the city, from its founding to its current status as a tech hub, exposes long-standing racism in development, school funding, infrastructure, and environmental quality. Austin is now home to conspiracist Alex Jones and ultrarich neolibertarians Joe Rogan and Elon Musk rather than the artists, musicians, and laid-back folks who drew them there. Well researched and eloquent, this book will appeal to those interested in gentrification, urban development, and city life.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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